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Integrating chemical and biological technologies in upcycling plastic waste to medium-chain α,ω-Diacidoa mark
  • Yeo, In Seok ;
  • Go, Kang Seok ;
  • Jeon, Woo Young ;
  • Jang, Min Jeong ;
  • Lee, Hye Jeong ;
  • Seo, Sung Hwa ;
  • Kim, Young Su ;
  • Park, Hyun A. ;
  • Min, Byung wook ;
  • Park, Kyungmoon ;
  • Yang, Yung Hun ;
  • Choi, Kwon Young ;
  • Lee, Hong Weon ;
  • Jeon, Sang Goo ;
  • Ahn, Jung Oh
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Publication Year
2024-04-20
Publisher
Elsevier Ltd
Citation
Journal of Cleaner Production, Vol.451
Keyword
Candida tropicalisMicrobial biotransformationPlastic waste upcyclingPyrolysis oilSustainabilityα,ω-diacids
Mesh Keyword
Biological technologyCandida tropicalisChains lengthChemical and biologicalsChemical technologiesMicrobial biotransformationsPlastic waste upcyclingPlastics wastePyrolysis oilΑ,ω-diacid
All Science Classification Codes (ASJC)
Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the EnvironmentEnvironmental Science (all)Strategy and ManagementIndustrial and Manufacturing Engineering
Abstract
The growing accumulation of plastic waste poses a pressing environmental challenge. Traditional disposal methods, such as incineration and landfilling, carry considerable health and ecological risks. In response, our study presents an innovative method to repurpose mixed plastic waste into valuable α,ω-diacids utilizing chemo-biological processes. We extracted pyrolysis oil, rich in hydrocarbons spanning a broad range of chain lengths (C7 to C32), from household plastic waste and employed a genetically engineered β-oxidation-blocked Candida tropicalis strain to convert this oil into α,ω-diacids of various chain lengths. Simple distillation at 200 °C enabled the extraction of medium-chain hydrocarbons from the pyrolysis oil. However, an increased ratio of medium-chain alkenes posed a toxicity challenge to the cells. Through hydrogenation, these medium-chain alkenes were fully converted to alkanes. Remarkably, cell growth was maintained even with an 8% concentration of hydrogenates. The subsequent biotransformation yielded medium-chain diacids, with 94.3% of the produced α,ω-diacids being of medium-chain length (C7 to C14). These results offer a novel and scalable solution for converting everyday plastic waste into valuable chemicals, thus significantly contributing to the circular economy and the advancement of sustainability goals.
ISSN
0959-6526
Language
eng
URI
https://dspace.ajou.ac.kr/dev/handle/2018.oak/34096
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jclepro.2024.141890
Fulltext

Type
Article
Funding
This work was supported by the Industrial Strategic Technology Development Program (grant no. 2002734 and 20012501) funded by the Ministry of Trade, Industry & Energy (MOTIE, South Korea) and was also supported by the Basic Core Technology Development Program (grant no. 2022M3J4A1091445) of the National Research Foundation (NRF) funded by the Ministry of Science and ICT (MSIT, South Korea).This work was supported by the Industrial Strategic Technology Development Program (grant no. 2002734 and 20012501 ) funded by the Ministry of Trade, Industry & Energy ( MOTIE , Korea) and was also supported by the Basic Core Technology Development Program (grant no. 2022M3J4A1091445 ) of the National Research Foundation ( NRF ) funded by the Ministry of Science and ICT ( MSIT , Korea).
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Choi, Kwon Young최권영
College of Bio-convergence Engineering
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